Global Metabolic Stress of Isoeffort Continuous and High Intensity

Sep 16, 2016 - Exercise Physiology and Biochemistry Laboratory, Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences at Serres, Aristotle University of...
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Global metabolic stress of isoeffort continuous and high intensity interval aerobic exercise: a comparative 1H NMR metabonomic study Andreas Zafeiridis, Anastasia Chrysovalantou Chatziioannou, Haralambos Sarivasiliou, Antonios Kyparos, Michalis G Nikolaidis, Ioannis S Vrabas, Alexandros Pechlivanis, Panagiotis Zoumpoulakis, Constantinos Baskakis, Konstantina Dipla, and Georgios A. Theodoridis J. Proteome Res., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.6b00545 • Publication Date (Web): 16 Sep 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on September 17, 2016

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Title Page Global metabolic stress of isoeffort continuous and high intensity interval aerobic exercise: a comparative 1H NMR metabonomic study Andreas Zafeiridis1*, Anastasia Chrysovalantou Chatziioannou2, Haralambos Sarivasiliou1, Antonios Kyparos1, Michalis G. Nikolaidis1, Ioannis S. Vrabas1, Alexandros Pechlivanis3, Panagiotis Zoumpoulakis4, Constantinos Baskakis4, Konstantina Dipla1, Georgios A. Theodoridis2 +. 1

Exercise Physiology and Biochemistry Laboratory, Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences at Serres, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 62121 Greece

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School of Chemistry, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, 54124 Greece

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Biomolecular Medicine, Division of Computational and Systems Medicine, Department of Surgery and Cancer, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, SW7 2AZ London, United Kingdom.

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Institute of Biology, Medicinal Chemistry & Biotechnology, National Hellenic Research Foundation, 48, Vas. Constantinou Avenue, Athens, 11635 Greece.

Address for correspondence: Zafeiridis, Andreas Ph.D. Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences at Serres, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Ag. Ioannis, 62110 Serres, Greece Phone: +30 2310 991082 Fax: +30 23210 64805 E-mail: [email protected] + Address correspondence concerning metabonomics/statistical analyses GT: [email protected] Andreas Zafeiridis*: [email protected] Anastasia Chrysovalantou Chatziioannou: [email protected] Haralambos Sarivasiliou: [email protected] Antonios Kyparos: [email protected] Michalis G. Nikolaidis: [email protected] Ioannis S. Vrabas: [email protected] Alexandros Pechlivanis: [email protected] Panagiotis Zoumpoulakis: [email protected] Constantinos Baskakis: [email protected] Konstantina Dipla: [email protected] Georgios A. Theodoridis +: [email protected]

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ABSTRACT The overall metabolic/energetic stress occurring during an exercise-bout is proposed as the main driving force for long-term training adaptations. Continuous and high-intensity interval exercises (HIIE) are currently prescribed to acquire the muscular and metabolic benefits of aerobic training. We applied 1H NMR-based metabonomics to compare the overall metabolic perturbation and the activation of individual bio-energetic pathways of three popular aerobic exercises matched for effort/strain. Nine men performed continuous, long-interval (3min-bouts), and short-interval (30sbouts) exercise-bouts under isoeffort conditions. Blood was collected before and after exercise. The multivariate PCA and OPLS-DA models showed a distinct separation of pre- and post-exercise samples in three protocols. The two models did not discriminate the post-exercise overall metabolic profiles of three exercise types. Analysis focused on muscle bio-energetic pathways revealed an extensive up-regulation of carbohydrate-lipid metabolism and TCA-cycle in all three protocols; there were only few differentiations among protocols in post-exercise abundance of molecules when longinterval bouts were performed. In conclusion, continuous and HIIE exercise protocols, when performed with similar effort/strain, induce comparable global metabolic response/stress despite their marked differences in work-bout intensities. This study highlights the importance of NMRmetabonomics in comprehensive monitoring of metabolic consequences of exercise training in blood of athletes and exercising individuals.

Key words: metabolomics, exercise, aerobic, interval exercise, metabolites, metabolism, carbohydrates, lipids, amino acids, NMR

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1. INTRODUCTION Aerobic (endurance) exercise improves muscle metabolism, increases cardiorespiratory fitness, and reduces the metabolic risk factors associated with cardiovascular diseases in healthy and diseased adults 1-3. Continuous and high-intensity interval protocols (HIIE) are two aerobic exercise regimens that are currently prescribed to acquire the benefits of endurance training. The beneficial metabolic long-term training adaptations are, at least in part, specific to the extent of metabolic perturbation and to the activation of biochemical signaling pathways that occur during an acute exercise bout 3-5. Thus, understanding the metabolic fingerprint of continuous and HIIE, by monitoring changes in overall metabolic/energetic profile and relevant metabolites, may provide insights into the muscular adaptive responses and the preventive/therapeutic effects of each exercise regimen on markers of health. It may also allow clinicians and sports scientists to prescribe exercise with greater clarity to the expected adaptations. In this study we applied the metabonomic approach to investigate the overall metabolic variations of three popular aerobic exercise regimens, the continuous exercise and two HIIE, the short (30s-bouts) and the long (3min-bouts). In contrast to conventional approaches focusing on few preselected metabolites, metabonomics encompasses the integrative metabolic response of several biochemical pathways providing a global unbiased (non-targeted) “snapshot” of the organism’s overall cellular metabolic status and physiological function 6. This approach enables also the discrimination of the overall metabolic state between various physiological or pathological stimuli. 1H-NMR, in particular, allows the assessment of small molecules involved in different bio-energetic metabolic pathways (e.g. TCA cycle intermediates, amino acids). Therefore, metabonomics is being increasingly used to examine the metabolic stress to a single exercise bout 7-14. Continuous protocols use exercise bouts of long duration at steady sub-maximal intensities, while interval protocols employ shorter exercise bouts at higher intensities (near or above VO2max) interspersed with recovery phases. The integration of exercise duration and intensity determines the overall metabolic/energetic stress, the main driving force for cellular and physiological processes and the long-term training adaptive responses 3-5. The activation of individual molecular and metabolic

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pathways during exercise may be influenced by the independent and interactive effects of (i) the repeated rest to work transitions 15, 16, (ii) the configurations in intensity and duration of work and rest intervals 17, 18, and (iii) the hormonal responses 19. Comparison of the cellular metabolic/energetic stress of continuous exercise and HIIE was the subject of recent communication that used targeted metabolomics on specific biochemical pathways (glycolysis, lipolysis) and molecules 12. Targeted approaches, however, do not provide information on changes in overall metabolic stress, an important governor of molecular signaling for muscular adaptations 3, 4, and do not integrate metabolic fluxes and stimuli of several bio-energetic pathways. Importantly, the continuous and HIIE, although equalized for external mechanical work-load in that previous study, differed in overall effort/strain (internal physiological load). A more demanding exercise may result to greater sympathoadrenal drive and different hormonal responses affecting the metabolic flux. Thus, it is not clear whether the different metabolic responses in two protocols were attributed to the type of aerobic regimen per se (continuous and HIIE) or to the higher overall effort/strain in HIIE. Finally, the overall metabolic stress of the short-interval protocols (~30s) has yet to be examined; despite that such exercise regimes have been widely used and studied in sport and clinical settings. The current investigation applied a multivariate untargeted NMR profiling of blood from athletes before and after intense continuous and HIIE exercise protocols. The study includes several novel elements: (i) the study of the overall metabolic/energetic stress of a high-intensity short-interval (30s) exercise protocol, (ii) a comparison of global metabolic/energetic stress and metabolic fingerprint of continuous, long-interval (LI) and short-interval (SI) aerobic exercise protocols, and (iii) the use of isoeffort approach when comparing the metabolic stress of three popular aerobic exercise regimens. The latter is of particular importance since the rise in rate of perceived exertion (effort) is highly associated with changes in peripheral metabolic compounds during moderate to high intensity exercise20. We also focused on molecules related to major bio-energetic pathways (glycolysis, lipolysis, amino acid metabolism, TCA cycle).

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2. EXPERIMENTAL SECTION 2.1 Subjects Nine young healthy men volunteered to participate in this study. All participants were healthy and participated in soccer training 4-5 times per week. Their mean (±SE) age, body mass, height, maximal heart rate (HRmax), VO2max, and maximal aerobic velocity were 20.5 ± 0.7 years, 74.7 ± 1.3 kg, 179.1 ± 1.5 cm, 196 ± 2 beats·min−1, 59.7 ± 1.2 mL kg−1·min−1, and 15.3 ± 0.3 km h-1, respectively. Before the start of the study, the institutional review board committee approved the experimental protocol, and the participants provided the written informed consent. All participants completed a medical questionnaire to ensure that they were not using any medications, and were free of cardiac, respiratory, renal, or metabolic diseases. 2.2 Maximal graded exercise test On the first visit, following the body mass and height measurement (Seca, Hamburg, Germany) the participants performed a maximal incremental test on a motorized treadmill (Runrace, Technogym, Gambettola, Italy) for the assessment of maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max), maximal aerobic velocity (MAV), and maximal heart rate (HRmax). The initial speed was set at 8 km h-1 (0% slope) and was increased by 1 km h-1 every 2 min until volitional exhaustion. The test was terminated when the participant was no longer able to maintain the speed. Respiratory gas exchange was measured breath-by-breath (Oxycon Pro, Jaeger, Germany) and heart rate was recorded (Polar Electro, Kempele, Finland) continuously during the incremental test. The criteria for VO2max (maximum effort) were: (i) heart within 10 beats_min-1 of the predicted HRmax (210 – (0.65 × age), (ii) a respiratory exchange ratio (RER) >1.15; (iii) visible exhaustion and inability to sustain exercise despite continuous verbal encouragement; and (iv) a plateau in oxygen consumption (VO2) (increment of less than 2.1 ml kg-1 min-1 despite the increase in workload). All participants attained at least three of the above criteria ensuring that maximum effort and VO2max were achieved. VO2max was defined as the highest mean of two successive 15-s periods VO2 values. MAV was defined as the speed at which VO2max was first achieved and maintained for at least 1 min21.

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2.3 Continuous and Interval exercise protocols On three separate visits, the participants performed, in a randomized order, the intense continuous, the LI, and the SI exercise protocols. Upon arrival to the laboratory and after a 15-min seated rest, a preexercise blood sample was obtained from the antecubital vein. Following a standardized warm-up, the participants completed either the intense continuous (at 80% of MAV), the LI protocol (3-min runs at 95% of MAV with 3-min recovery at 35% of MAV) or the SI (30-s runs at 110% of MAV with 30-s recovery at 50% of MAV) exercise protocols. The average VO2 of work-bouts for each exercise protocol was calculated by dividing the sum of all the 15-sec segment VO2 values by the total time of work-bouts. A post-exercise blood sample was collected within 5 min of completion of exercise. The three exercise protocols were performed within two weeks at the same time of the day (±1 h) and in similar atmospheric conditions (temperature, 22–23°C; relative humidity, 40%–45%). To ensure that all participants would provide a similar overall effort (i.e. the same physiological strain would be exerted) in three exercise protocols, the end-point for the continuous and interval exercise protocols was defined as a HR of 5 beats below their HRmax (i.e. about 97.5–98% of HRmax); this HR was maintained for 4 consecutive, 5-s readings before terminating the exercise. At the completion of exercise, the rate of perceived exertion (RPE) was also obtained. HR and RPE scores are being consistently used as measures of physiological strain and training load 22-24. As evident in the results' section, the RPE scores were similar across protocols, indicating that equal overall effort was achieved in three protocols. The participants followed a diet consisting of 55% carbohydrates, 30% of fat and 15% of proteins for 2 days before the tests. Two and the half hours prior to each testing, they consumed a standardized meal of similar nutrient composition with the energy content of 9 kcal per kg of body weight. Participants were also instructed to abstain from consuming alcoholic drinks the day prior the sessions and caffeinated drinks the day of the testing, to refrain from any exercise activity for 48 h before each test, and to have sufficient rest the night prior to the sessions.

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2.4 Blood samples collection & preparation Blood samples (10 ml) were collected into EDTA tubes before and within 5 minutes after the completion of each aerobic exercise protocol. The samples were immediately centrifuged at 1800 × g at 4°C for 15 min (Centrifuge 5702R, Eppendorf AG, Hamburg, Germany). The plasma was removed, separated into aliquots, and stored at -80°C until 1H NMR analysis. On the day of analysis, the samples were thawed at room temperature and were prepared for analysis in a random sequence. 150µL of buffer NaH2PO4/Na2HPO4 in D2O (0.5 mol/L, pH 7.2) were diluted with 400 µL of EDTAplasma. In that mixture, 50 µL of sodium maleate dibasic (6 mmol/L) were added as internal standard. After vortexing and centrifuging at 12000 g (4οC) for 10 min, 550 µL of the supernatant were placed in 5 mm wide NMR tubes. Plasma volume changes were calculated using the hematocrit (Hct) and hemoglobin (Hb) concentrations before and after each protocol with the following equation: PVA = (100 × HbB/HbA) - [(100 × HbB/HbA) × HctA]25; where PVA is plasma volume after exercise, HctA is the ml of red cells per ml of blood after exercise, Hb is hemoglobin concentration before and HbA is hemoglobin after exercise. The percentage change in plasma volume (% ∆PV) after exercise was calculated as %∆PV = 100 × ( PVA – PVB)/PVB; where PVB (plasma volume before exercise) is equal to 100 minus the Hct (%) 25. 2.5 1H NMR Spectroscopy and Data pre-processing NMR spectra were recorded on a Varian 600 MHz NMR spectrometer operating at 599.828 MHz, with the temperature held at 293.15 K. Each spectrum was acquired using the Carr-Purcell-MeiboomGill (CPMG) pulse, with 128 scans over a spectral width of 6613.8 Hz, acquisition time of 4.832 s and relaxation delay of 6.00 s. The CPMG pulse suppresses the broad lipoprotein signals. The suppression of water signal was achieved by applying the Presat pulse sequence with presaturation power set to 0 dB. All spectra were referenced to sodium maleate dibasic at 5.994 ppm, phased and baselinecorrected using the MestReNova 9.0. The residual water signal was excluded (4.40-5.24 ppm) and the full spectra were binned in increments of 0.0005 ppm. The resulted data were normalized to sodium maleate to compensate for possible differences in solutions concentrations.

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DEPT135-HSQC 2D NMR spectra were recorded for assisting the assignment of metabolites, in combination with the reference metabolic 1H NMR database (Chenomx) and literature data. 2.6 Statistical Analysis Spectral data were analyzed using multivariate statistics including unsupervised principal component analysis (PCA) and supervised orthogonally filtered PLS-DA (OPLS-DA) pareto scaled on Simca 13 statistical software (Version 13.0.2.0, Umetrics, Umea, Sweeden). PCA-X and OPLS-DA analyses were applied to examine the differentiation in overall metabonomic profile (i) between the pre and the post exercise blood samples within each exercise protocol (exercise effect) and (ii) among the three aerobic exercise protocols at prior to and after exercise time points (effect of protocol). For each valid OPLS-DA model S-line plots were generated to identify the main discriminators and their contribution to the separation. S-line plot is a type of plot targeting mainly in NMR and other spectral data, displaying the original spectra based on the predictive loading. S-line plot is a pseudo-NMR spectrum projection of the OPLS-DA coefficient’s plots. In that plot the relevance to the model is indicated by the abundance of the signal while the significance by the color code. Variables having significant effect usually combine high absolute numerical loading value and red/orange color. Each crossvalidation parameter (R2X, R2Y and Q2Y) was checked in order to assess the robustness and the predictability of the models and only models with high R2Y and Q2Y values corresponding to good discrimination and predictability were further investigated. Another validation tool for PLS-DA models was the permutation test (n=999). Two-way ANOVAs with repeated measures were used to determine the effect of endurance protocol (continuous, LI, and SI) and of exercise (pre to post) on 15 metabolites related to muscle bioenergetics and on 2 indices showing the transition from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism (Statistica 7.0, Statsoft, France). Significant main effects were followed by Newman post-hoc tests. Percent change from pre to post exercise was also calculated for each metabolite. Data for univariate statistics are presented as mean ±SE. The level of statistical significance for all analyses was set at α = 0.05.

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3. RESULTS 3.1 Exercise protocols characteristics The mean values for exercise protocol characteristics are presented in Table 1. Total exercise time and completed distance (including the active recovery time in interval protocols) were significantly higher in LI vs. the respective values in intense continuous and SI (p < 0.01-0.05). There were no differences, however, among protocols in duration and distance covered at or above the lower intensity (40% VO2max) that is prescribed for enhancing aerobic fitness in healthy individuals. The three protocols were matched for overall effort (RPE: 18.67 ± 0.21, 18.50 ± 0.19, and 18.44 ± 0.18 and RPE medians (IQ range1 to 3): 18.5 (0.5), 18.5 (1.0), and 18.5 (0.5) for intense continuous, LI and SI, respectively) and physiological strain (HRpeak: 191.8 ± 2.0, 192.0 ± 2.0, 192.6 ± 1.5). The kcals consumed during

the entire protocols (including the recovery time in SI and LI) were similar in the continuous and SI but higher in LI protocol (p < 0.05). However, the average VO2 as well as the kcal consumed during work-bouts performed above the lower functional intensity for enhancing aerobic capacity were not different among protocols. There were no differences in plasma volume changes among protocols (-7.1 ± 1.4%, -8.6 ± 0.6%, and -7.6 ± 1.2%, in continuous, LI, and SI, respectively). 3.2 Metabonomic investigation after endurance exercise (effect of exercise) Typical 1H NMR plasma spectrum is presented in Figure 1. Selected regions corresponding to metabolites with the most distinctive variations after exercise are shown in the insert figure. To determine the effect of intense endurance exercise on shifts of overall metabonomic spectra, an unsupervised principal component analysis (PCA) was developed including the pre- and the postexercise samples of all three protocols. When testing all plasma samples in one set, PCA scores plot provides a distinct separation between pre- and post-exercise samples with a clear left to right shift for all subjects (Figure 2), indicating that exercise was responsible for the majority of the variation in the original spectra. In this PCA score plot no discrimination can be seen in metabonomic spectra between the three exercise protocols for either pre-exercise or for post-exercise samples. Next, supervised OPLS-DA models were built to identify the main discriminators of the metabolic shift. The profound increase in lactate was found to be the key differentiator (Figure S1). New OPLS-DA model excluding

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the chemical shifts corresponding to lactate still showed separation between pre and post exercise samples and revealed glucose, pyruvate, succinate and alanine as major separating factors (Figure 3). 3.3 Comparison of metabonomic spectra of three exercise protocols To study metabolic changes within each exercise protocol, OPLS-DA models were generated for each exercise protocol separately. Figure 4 shows OPLS-DA scores plots before and after the exclusion of lactate from the dataset and the corresponding S-line plots illustrating the contribution of NMR shifts (peaks) in group discrimination. Clear separation of pre- from post-exercise samples was observed for each protocol. For continuous and for SI exercise protocols the separation was attributed to increases in pyruvate, glucose, alanine, and succinate (Figure 4A and 4C); for the LI protocol, the separation, in addition to the above compounds, was also ascribed to increase in citrate and proline (Figure 4B). Despite the substantial shift of metabolome after exercise in all three protocols, no valid pairwise OPLS-DA model could be developed to compare the metabolome of exercise protocols for pre- or for post-exercise samples. This finding indicates the absence of statistically significant differences in plasma overall metabolic composition at pre and at post-exercise time points among intense continuous, LI, and SI protocols. 3.4 Metabonomic analysis targeted on individual bio-energetic pathways Analysis of variance (ANOVA) targeted on 15 metabolites related to muscle bioenergetics (e.g. glycolysis, lipolysis, amino acid metabolism, and TCA cycle intermediates) and 2 indices of transition from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism was subsequently performed. Pre- to post-exercise changes within each protocol and pairwise comparisons between protocols at pre and post-exercise time points are presented in Table 2. ANOVAs indicated a significant main effect of exercise (pre to post) on 15 of 17 metabolites (except for tyrosine and histidine) and significant endurance "protocol" × "exercise" interactions on 3 of 18 molecules (citrate, alanine, glutamine). Pairwise analyses within each exercise protocol revealed: (i) ten molecules significantly increased (p < 0.001-0.05) after the completion of all three exercise protocols (glucose, lactate, pyruvate, glycerol, alanine, citrate, succinate, lactate/pyruvate and lactate/citrate), (ii) two amino acids (glutamine and proline) decreased only after continuous and LI

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protocols (p < 0.01-0.05), and (iii) six amino acids (leucine, isoleucine, valine, tyrosine, and histidine) did not demonstrate significant pre to post-exercise changes. Pairwise comparisons between protocols did not show significant differences for pre-exercise values of all metabolites, as also shown by multivariate analysis. At the completion of exercise, however, the concentrations of alanine and citrate were significantly higher in LI vs. the continuous and SI protocols (p < 0.01 - 0.05). 4. DISCUSSION This study was to the first to compare the global cellular metabolic/energetic stress of a continuous and two types of HIIE matched for overall effort (as determined by RPE scale) and strain. We applied 1

H NMR-based metabolomics to compare the overall metabolic shifts (multivariate approach) as well

as the activation of individual biochemical branches involved in energy production (targeted strategy). The novel findings of our study are: (i) a clear substantial shift of plasma metabolome (an increase in overall metabolite composition) after all three types of exercise, (ii) no discrimination of the overall metabolic snapshot among the three isoeffort high-intensity endurance exercise protocols, (iii) an extensive up-regulation of carbohydrate/lipid metabolism, and activation of the TCA cycle (as suggested by increase in lactate, pyruvate, glycerol, citrate, and succinate); the plasma amino acids levels were affected to a lesser degree, and (iv) no differences among protocols, with a few exceptions, in post-exercise metabolic profiles related to specific biochemical pathways. The isoeffort approach employed in this study integrates the contribution of intensity and duration of exercise to overall effort/strain. This is critical, since the overall effort/stress may affect hormonal and molecular signaling and hence, the metabolic response. For example, an exercise protocol with greater overall effort and physiological strain, results to greater sympathoadrenal drive and hence metabolic responses confounding the effects of the protocol per se on metabolic stress. Thus, matching for the overall exercise stimulus (effort), when comparing different training modalities, is an important aspect when examining the effects of the type of endurance exercise per se (continuous vs. interval exercise) on metabolic response. The idea of matching for overall effort, when comparing the responses/adaptations of aerobic training modalities, has been recently advocated by several studies as the most appropriate matching method 26-29.

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4.1 Global (overall) metabolic response Changes in the overall cellular metabolic/energetic stress during each type of endurance training may provide insights into the training load and cellular long-term adaptations 4. PCA and OPLS-DA clearly differentiated pre from post-exercise samples for each endurance protocol, suggesting an increased substrate flux; the main discriminators were metabolites related to glycolysis (lactate, pyruvate, and glucose) and TCA cycle (succinate). When OPLS-DA models were developed separately for each exercise type to reveal protocol-specific changes in metabolome, citrate was also identified, but only in LI. The most important finding was that the PCA and the OPLS-DA models did not distinguish the postexercise overall metabolic spectra of the three protocols. This may be rooted in the similar overall effort/strain exerted during the three endurance protocols; a more demanding protocol would conceivably elicit a greater shift of plasma metabolome. Our findings are in accordance with the centrally regulated effort model suggesting a high association between the rise in rate of perceived exertion (RPE) and changes in peripheral metabolic compounds during exercise at moderate to high intensities 20. In fact, RPE has been proposed as an indicator of metabolic reserves as sensed by the brain. Our results imply that when matched for overall effort and strain (RPE and HRpeak) the three endurance protocols may produce similar overall metabolic challenge and possibly similar muscular long-term adaptations 3-5, 29. This is in line with a recent study showing that two different sprint training programs consisting of maximal runs showed similar acute and long-term impact on serum metabolic fingerprint 14. Thus, the overall metabolic response is mostly tied up to the overall effort and strain rather than to the characteristics (intensity, duration, work-rest transitions) of the endurance protocol per se. Notably, no direct comparisons with other studies is possible, since the only study that compared continuous and LI endurance protocols using metabolomics did not carry a global multivariate strategy 12

. Our results are in context with previous studies that used conventional analytical techniques and

isoeffort/isostrain exercise conditions (as suggested by RPE and/or HR) and reported similar responses between continuous and interval endurance exercises for metabolites (glucose, glycogen, free fatty acids), for circulating microRNAs, and for molecular signaling pathways (AMPK and p38MAPK 12

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phosphorylation) and genes (PGC-1a, PRC, PPARβ/δ, and PDK4 mRNA) associated with adaptations to endurance exercise 30-33. 4.2 Anaerobic Glycolysis All three protocols caused a significant rise in plasma metabolites associated with carbohydrate catabolism. The rise in plasma pyruvate and lactate clearly suggest an enhanced rate of “anaerobic” glycolytic pathway; the observed increase in plasma glucose is most likely related to its greater rate of appearance, due to the enhanced hepatic glycogen breakdown during exercise 34. Although these responses were expected for HIIE, due to their high-intensity of work-bouts, they were also observed in continuous exercise. The reason is that the continuous protocol was performed above the anaerobic threshold and near to exhaustion. Hence, an increase in glucose, pyruvate, and lactate seems realistic and in context with other studies using 1H-NMR 10, 35-37 or conventional analytical techniques 34, 38. To the best of our knowledge this is the first study comparing indicators of carbohydrate metabolism after isoeffort continuous, SI, and LI endurance exercise. An interesting observation was that glucose, pyruvate, and lactate increased in the continuous protocol to values comparable to those in HIIE. If the continuous protocol was performed at lower intensity (below the anaerobic threshold) the results might have been different. The most likely explanation for this response is that all three aerobic protocols were performed with similar overall effort and near to exhaustion. In previous studies, RPE and HR have been highly associated with sympathoadrenal activation and noradrenaline levels during moderate to high intensity exercise 20, 39, 40. In fact, changes in blood noradrenaline, lactate, and glucose have been proposed as peripheral signals influencing RPE 41. Increased catecholamines and sympathoadrenal drive during moderate to high-intensity exercise may stimulate muscle glycogen utilization 42 contributing to elevated pyruvate and lactate and increase plasma glucose through enhanced hepatic glucose production 43 and/or inhibition of insulin secretion and reduction in peripheral glucose uptake 38, 42. Meyer et al. showed that when exercising at similar HR and RPE, continuous and interval exercise protocols result to similar average glucose, norepinephrine, epinephrine, and dopamine levels30. Another possible explanation for the similar increase in indicators of glycolysis may be related to changes in energy fuels during work to recovery transitions in HIIE 44.

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All three protocols resulted to similar rise in lactate to pyruvate ratio. The change in lactate to pyruvate ratio has been used as an index of tissue hypoxia, a transition from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism carbohydrates during exercise 8, and as a marker of oxidative stress and cellular oxidative damage 45. Tissue hypoxia is among the main mechanisms promoting mitochondrial biogenesis and capillary proliferation through the stimulatory action of HIF-1 and VEGF. This finding is in context with previous study reporting similar O2 saturation in vastus medialis muscle when the three exercise protocols were executed with similar effort 46. 4.3 Oxidative metabolism One fundamental adaptation to endurance exercise training is the increase in skeletal muscle oxidative capacity. In support, we found a significant rise in plasma glycerol in all three protocols suggesting increase in lipolysis 37, 47. We also observed a significant rise in circulating span 1 and 2 TCA intermediates (TCAi, citrate and succinate), indicative of increased TCA cycle flux, after all three endurance protocols. The increase in plasma citrate and succinate most likely resulted from the expansion of muscle TCAi pool, due to activation of oxidative pathways and excessive pyruvate accumulation, and their spill over into the circulation. Our findings corroborate previous metabonomic studies reporting the accumulation of TCAi in plasma after intense continuous 10, 35-37 and LI 12 protocols. The functional significance, though, of changes in blood TCAi is still unclear 48. We add new information to prior findings showing that the intense continuous and HIIE protocols elicit comparable rise in glycerol. This may be attributed to similar effort and strain in three protocols and their association with sympathadrenal activation and catecholamine release, known modulators of lipid mobilization. However, in lack of more comprehensive lipid metabolism analysis in our study, the suggestion of analogous lipolytic rates in three protocols should be interpreted with caution. The greater plasma citrate observed after LI vs. the other two protocols is possibly related to the very low intensity and the long duration of the rest phase in LI. Support to this stems from previous studies reporting an abrupt accumulation in plasma FFA during the first minutes of recovery after exercise 49, 50

contributing to high citrate through acetylCoA formation. The mechanisms, of course, underlying

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the differences in circulating citrate in LI vs. the other two protocols should be examined experimentally. The present study provides evidence that under isoeffort conditions the three endurance exercise regimes have a similar potential to increase oxidative metabolism. An interesting observation was that the oxidative metabolic phenotype was similarly up-regulated in continuous and SI protocols, despite their marked differences in exercise intensity. Thus, provided an adequate intensity and duration, the continuous aerobic exercise may induce the oxidative pathways to an extent observed in high-intensity SI protocols. In support, Essen et al. also reported comparable glycerol response in SI (15s) and continuous (60min) protocols 44, and a recent metabonomic study reported lower plasma citrate and succinate after moderate-intensity continuous exercise compared to a more demanding LI protocol 12. 4.4 Amino Acid metabolism So far, no study has compared the changes in circulating amino acids among three popular endurance exercise protocols. In general, we did not observe substantial changes in plasma amino acids immediately after the three exercise protocols. Alanine increased in all three types of exercise which is in accordance with most previous studies that used either short or prolonged endurance exercise protocols 12, 51-53. Based on previous studies, the increase in plasma alanine seems likely the result of an excessive pyruvate accumulation in the muscle as part of the TCAi pool anaplerotic reactions and the activation of alanine-glucose cycle to replenish the carbohydrate/glycogen supplies 48, 53. We have also observed a marked reduction in glutamine, also an important gluconeogenic precursor; however, this was evident only after intense continuous and LI exercise protocols. Based on previous reports, three reasons may collectively explain this finding: (i) the increase in hepatic, gut, and renal glutamine uptake from the circulation to support the gluconeogenic pathway 54-56, (ii) the increased renal uptake of glutamine during metabolic acidosis 54, 55, (iii) the decreased glutamine release from the muscle due to the reduced intramuscular glutamate availability during exercise 48, 53. The lack of changes in plasma glutamine after the SI protocol in our study is in accordance with previous investigations that employed repeated exercise bouts of short duration (30-60s)57, 58. The changes in plasma glutamine and proline levels after endurance exercise are not clear. Most studies reported a

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reduction 10, 51, 52, 55, 56, 59, 60 or an increase 10, 12, 52, 56, 61 after a prolonged submaximal or an exhaustive endurance exercise, while fewer works showed no change 12, 51, 56. BCAA (leucine, isoleucine, and valine) originate from muscle protein breakdown and are used during exercise as an energy substrate to support gluconeogenesis and the production of TCAi. We did not reveal changes in plasma BCAA in all three exercise protocols. A recent metabonomic study also failed to observe significant changes in these molecules immediately after a moderate intensity continuous or a high-intensity LI exercise 12. Other studies have reported increase 11, reduction 35, 52 or no change 9, 60 in circulating or urine BCAA levels. Definite conclusions on BCAA metabolism during the three endurance protocols could not be drawn, since plasma levels of BCAA reflect the balance between their production and utilization. 5. CONCLUSIONS All three endurance protocols caused marked perturbations of the overall metabolic profile. The holistic view emerging from our study is that, when performed with similar effort and strain, the intense continuous and high-intensity interval exercise protocols (short and long) induce comparable global cellular metabolic/energetic stress. This is despite their marked differences in the intensity of work-bouts. Thus, the overall metabolic response during endurance exercise appears to depend mostly on the overall effort and strain rather than on the specific characteristics of the endurance protocol per se. These findings are in accordance with the centrally regulated effort model suggesting a high association between the rise in effort and changes in peripheral metabolites during exercise 20. The metabonomic analyses focusing on individual metabolic bio-energetic pathways (glycolysis etc.), generally support the multiavariate global metabolic approach. Under isoeffort conditions, the continuous and the SI protocols resulted not only to comparable global metabolic stress but also to analogous changes in metabolites related to muscle bioenergetics. Although our findings pertain to comparable cellular/metabolic challenge and long-term training adaptations when the three different exercises are performed with similar effort, this view should be evaluated experimentally.

Supporting Information. The following files are available free of charge. Figure S1- OPLS-DA model including the chemical shifts corresponding to lactate. 16

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No funding was received for this study.

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Table 1. The mean ±SE of exercise characteristics for isoeffort intense-c (ontinuous, longinterval, and short-interval exercise Variable

Continuous

Entire exercise protocol Duration (sec) Distance (m) kcal kcal/min Exercise above the lower functional intensity (> 40%VO2max) a Duration Distance kcal kcal/min VO2average RPE mean median (IQ range1 to 3) HRpeak

Long-Interval

Short-Interval

(3min-3min)

(30s-30s)

1081 ± 48 3831 ± 213 341 ± 19 18.9 ± 0.5

1720 ± 188* 4986 ± 539* 447 ± 50* 15.6 ± 0.4*

1097 ± 101 3773 ± 342 352 ± 34 19.2 ± 0.6

1081 ± 48 3831 ± 213 341 ± 19 18.9 ± 0.5

950 ± 94 3840 ± 395 300 ± 93 19.0 ± 0.5

1097 ± 101 3773 ± 342 352 ± 34 19.2 ± 0.6

50.7 ± 1.2

50.8 ± 1.1

51.3 ± 1.5

18.67 ± 0.21 18.50 (0.5) 191.8 ± 2.0

18.50 ± 0.19 18.50 (1.0)

18.44 ± 0.18 18.50 (0.5)

192.0 ± 2.0

192.6 ± 1.5

a

Of note, the entire duration and distance in continuous and the short-interval exercise protocols were performed at or above the lower intensity (40-50% VO2max) that is prescribed for enhancing aerobic fitness in healthy individuals; in LI protocol only the work-bouts were performed above this intensity. * p < 0.05 vs. respective value in intense-continuous and short-interval

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Table 2. The mean ±SE signals of detected metabolites before and after isoeffort intensecontinuous long-interval, and short-interval exercise protocols

Lipid Metabolism

Carbohydrate Metabolism

Shift (ppm) 4.60

4.09

2.34

3.63

2.37

Glucose Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval Lactate Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval Pyruvate Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval Glycerol Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval Citrate Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval Succinate Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval Citrate/Succinate Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval

Anaerobic/Aerobic

TCA cycle

2.62

Pre Exercise

Variable

Lactate/Pyruvate Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval Lactate/ Citrate Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval

Amino acids metabolism

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Alanine Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval Leucine Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval Isoleucine Continuous Long-Interval Short-Interval

1.46

0.93

0.99

Post Exercise

% Change

3.41 ± 0.21 3.43 ± 0.16 3.05 ± 0.20

4.30 ± 0.16* 4.09 ± 0.22* 4.65 ± 0.50*

30 ± 10 20 ± 6 52 ± 11

0.16 ± 0.01 0.17 ± 0.02 0.19 ± 0.02

0.73 ± 0.08* 0.90 ± 0.09* 0.78 ± 0.08*

372 ± 45 508 ± 109 346 ± 63

0.15 ± 0.01 0.15 ± 0.01 0.14 ± 0.01

0.26 ± 0.02* 0.27 ± 0.01* 0.25 ± 0.01*

85 ± 13 86 ± 23 78 ± 13

1.19 ± 0.21 0.98 ± 0.12 1.26 ± 0.20

1.82 ± 0.21* 1.82 ± 0.23* 1.81 ± 0.28*

76 ± 23 90 ± 21 58 ± 22

0.112 ± 0.006 0.101 ± 0.005 0.104 ± 0.007

0.139 ± 0.009* 0.159 ± 0.011*# 0.143 ± 0.010*

25 ± 5 57 ± 8 39 ± 7

0.107 ± 0.012 0.129 ± 0.011 0.118 ± 0.014

0.256 ± 0.016* 0.211 ± 0.016* 0.275 ± 0.036*

155 ± 20 84 ± 33 139 ± 24

0.219 ± 0.014 0.230 ± 0.013 0.222 ± 0.019

0.395 ± 0.022* 0.370 ± 0.023* 0.417 ± 0.042*

82 ± 22 68 ± 53 89 ± 37

1.13 ± 0.13 1.13 ± 0.11 1.38 ± 0.17

2.85 ± 0.34* 3.44 ± 0.40* 3.17 ± 0.34*

156 ± 18 252 ± 72 153 ± 37

1.46 ± 0.16 1.76 ± 0.27 1.86 ± 0.17

5.69 ± 0.96* 6.02 ± 0.88* 5.71 ± 0.71*

284 ± 42 301 ± 79 219 ± 39

0.39 ± 0.03 0.37 ± 0.03 0.36 ± 0.02

0.58 ± 0.03* 0.63 ± 0.04*# 0.54 ± 0.02*

52 ± 7 77 ± 10 53 ± 7

0.28 ± 0.01 0.29 ± 0.01 0.28 ± 0.01

0.32 ± 0.02 0.31 ± 0.01 0.30 ± 0.02

13 ± 7 10 ± 5 7±6

0.070 ± 0.006 0.067 ± 0.008 0.074 ± 0.009

0.089 ± 0.005 0.093 ± 0.007 0.080 ± 0.004

33 ± 13 47 ± 12 21 ± 16

ANOVA significant main effects Exercise: p < 0.001

Exercise: p < 0.001

Exercise: p < 0.001

Exercise: p < 0.001

Exercise: p < 0.001 Interaction: p < 0.01

Exercise: p < 0.001

Exercise; p < 0.001

Exercise: p < 0.001

Exercise: p < 0.001

Exercise: p